Cyndi Lauper unveils report on LGBTQ youth homelessness
WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Years before reaching pop music stardom, Cyndi Lauper was down on her luck, broke and homeless.
She was in her late teens and ready to move out of her family’s house, but her parents wouldn’t sign a lease for her own place. She found a job at a restaurant, but that didn’t pan out either and she ended up living on the streets and in a shelter in Vermont.
“I felt like a failure because I couldn’t even be a good waitress,” the singer recounted Thursday morning to a small group of journalists in the courtyard of a luxury hotel off the Sunset Strip.
She told her experience with homelessness, which came nearly a decade before she became a pop superstar in the early ’80s, while unveiling a nationwide report on youth homelessness.